The policy relevance of wear emissions from road transport, now and in the future : an international workshop report and consensus statement


Autoria(s): Denier van der Gon Hugo A.C.; Gerlofs-Nijland Miriam E.; Gehrig Robert; Gustafsson Mats; Janssen Nicole; Harrison Roy M.; Hulskotte Jan; Johansson Christer; Jozwicka Magdalena; Keuken Menno; Krijgsheld Klaas; Ntziachristos Leonidas; Riediker Michael; Cassee Flemming R.
Data(s)

2013

Resumo

Road transport emissions are a major contributor to ambient particulate matter concentrations and have been associated with adverse health effects. Therefore, these emissions are targeted through increasingly stringent European emission standards. These policies succeed in reducing exhaust emissions, but do not address "nonexhaust" emissions from brake wear, tire wear, road wear, and suspension in air of road dust. Is this a problem? To what extent do nonexhaust emissions contribute to ambient concentrations of PM10 or PM2.5? In the near future, wear emissions may dominate the remaining traffic-related PM10 emissions in Europe, mostly due to the steep decrease in PM exhaust emissions. This underlines the need to determine the relevance of the wear emissions as a contribution to the existing ambient PM concentrations, and the need to assess the health risks related to wear particles, which has not yet received much attention. During a workshop in 2011, available knowledge was reported and evaluated so as to draw conclusions on the relevance of traffic-related wear emissions for air quality policy development. On the basis of available evidence, which is briefly presented in this paper, it was concluded that nonexhaust emissions and in particular suspension in air of road dust are major contributors to exceedances at street locations of the PM10 air quality standards in various European cities. Furthermore, wear-related PM emissions that contain high concentrations of metals may (despite their limited contribution to the mass of nonexhaust emissions) cause significant health risks for the population, especially those living near intensely trafficked locations. To quantify the existing health risks, targeted research is required on wear emissions, their dispersion in urban areas, population exposure, and its effects on health. Such information will be crucial for environmental policymakers as an input for discussions on the need to develop control strategies.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_8168C0BAF9D8

isbn:1096-2247

pmid:23472298

doi:10.1080/10962247.2012.741055

isiid:000318147900005

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association, vol. 63, no. 2, pp. 136-149

Palavras-Chave #Air Pollution ; Dust ; Nanoparticles ; Environmental Exposure ; Environmental Policy ; Risk Assessment ; Transportation ; Vehicle Emissions ;
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/review

article